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Lessons from High-Performing Schools

Lessons from High-Performing Schools. Michigan Teaching and Learning Institute August 24, 2010 Joseph F. Johnson, Jr., Ph.D. Executive Director, National Center for Urban School Transformation. National Center for Urban School Transformation.

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Lessons from High-Performing Schools

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  1. Lessons from High-Performing Schools Michigan Teaching and Learning Institute August 24, 2010 Joseph F. Johnson, Jr., Ph.D. Executive Director, National Center for Urban School Transformation

  2. National Center for Urban School Transformation Dedicated to identifying, studying, and promoting the best practices of America’s highest achieving urban schools in a manner that supports urban districts in transforming teaching and learning http://www.ncust.org

  3. NCUST Identifies, Celebrates, and Studies Non-selective, urban schools (serving primarily students from low-income families) that demonstrate high achievement for all students. These schools evidence: • High proficiency rates for all demographic groups • High graduation rates for all demographic groups • High rates of access to challenging programs for all demographic groups • No disproportionate enrollments of racial/ethnic groups in special education • Low rates of suspension/expulsion for all groups • Other indicators of student success/achievement

  4. In the past five years, NCUST has identified 48 remarkable elementary, middle, and high schools in 14 different states.

  5. 2010 NCUST Award Winners • Horace Mann Elementary, Glendale CA • International Elementary, Long Beach, CA • Lemay Elementary, Los Angeles, CA • Nueva Vista Elementary, Los Angeles, CA • Whitefoord Elementary, Atlanta, GA • Branch Brook School, Newark, NJ • Charles Lunsford School, Rochester, NY • Marble Hills High School, Bronx, NY • Escontrias Elementary, El Paso, TX • Hambrick Middle School, Houston, TX • Nathan Adams Elementary, Dallas, TX • Stephens Elementary, Houston, TX

  6. 2009 NCUST Award Winners • Bonham Elementary, Dallas, TX • Bursch Elementary, Compton, CA • Fallon Park Elementary, Roanoke, VA • Franklin Town Charter High, Philadelphia, PA • Golden Empire Elementary, Sacramento, CA • Highland Elementary, Silver Springs, MD • Ira Harbison Elementary, National City, CA • Lawndale High School, Los Angeles, CA • Kearny School of International Business, San Diego, CA • KIPP Adelante Academy, San Diego, CA • Montebello Gardens Elementary, Los Angeles, CA • World of Inquiry School, Rochester, NY

  7. Get a new principal Get a new plan Get a new textbook Get more test prep Get new students Get new teachers Get more teachers Get a new schedule Get a charter Get a new computer system Get a new reading program Get more aides Get new parents Get a new test Get a new curriculum Get a new staff development program School and District Leaders Rely on Many Strategies for Pursuing Better Achievement

  8. Bottom Line: In spite of all the many strategies used to turn around low performance – Nothing Changes Unless Teaching and Learning Changes.

  9. Sources of Similar Findings: • Chenoweth, K. (2007). It’s being done: Academic success in unexpected schools. Cambridge, MA: Harvard Education Press. • Edmonds, R. (1979). Effective schools for the urban poor. Educational Leadership, 37(1), 15-24. • Education Trust. (1999). Dispelling the myth: High-poverty schools exceeding expectations. Retrieved from ERIC database. (ED445140) • Education Trust. (2005). The power to change: High schools that help all students achieve. Retrieved from ERIC database. (ED490969)

  10. Sources of Similar Findings: • Johnson, J. F. & Asera, R. (1999). Hope for urban education: A study of nine high-performing, high-poverty, urban elementary schools. Retrieved from ERIC database. (ED438362) • Robinson, V. M. J., Lloyd, C. A., & Rowe, K. J. (2008) The impact of leadership on student outcomes: an analysis of the differential effects of leadership types. Educational Administration Quarterly, 44(5), 635-674. • Symonds, K. W. (2004). After the test: Closing the achievement gaps with data. Retrieved from http://www.ncrel.org/gap/studies/basrc.htm.

  11. There’s nothing easy or fortuitous about the accomplishments of high-performing schools. Their accomplishments represent hard work by smart, dedicated people. Hard work and dedication are essential, yet insufficient.

  12. It’s All About Leadership • Principal leadership • Teacher leadership • District office leadership • Community/school board leadership

  13. If Nothing Changes Unless Teaching & Learning Changes… • And if “It’s all about leadership,” • Then, how do leaders generate positive, substantive changes in teaching and learning?

  14. Leaders Generate: • Clear purpose • Unwavering passion • Powerful persistence

  15. Purpose Schools that achieve dramatic differences in results are driven – not to avoid sanctions – but, to improve students lives. Teachers, administrators, and support staff are united in purpose: They will create learning environments that lead every student to success in school and in life.

  16. How Do Great Schools Build and Sustain This Sense of Purpose? 1. Leaders keep conversations focused on the impact of everyday efforts on students. Communication frequently, consistently, and in multiple formats conveys the impact of everyday school actions on student lives.

  17. How Do Great Schools Build and Sustain This Sense of Purpose? 2. Leaders promote ambitious goals that generate enthusiasm and build a sense of mission. Leaders push beyond compliance and encourage everyone to embrace goals that will make a difference in students lives. People commit to goals they see as worth their effort.

  18. How Do Great Schools Build and Sustain This Sense of Purpose? 3. Leaders help everyone see their role in accomplishing goals. Leaders help everyone translate school goals into grade level, department, classroom, and individual student goals.

  19. How Do Great Schools Build and Sustain This Sense of Purpose? 4. Leaders help educators focus on key academic content. Leaders encourage teachers to teach a few concepts to mastery rather than “cover” everything. Leaders encourage educators to increase rigor and depth.

  20. How Do Great Schools Build and Sustain This Sense of Purpose? 5. Leaders focus attention on the quantity of instruction. Constantly, leaders seek opportunities to minimize distractions and transitions and maximize instructional time. They creatively use resources to extend the length of the learning day, week, and year.

  21. How Do Great Schools Build and Sustain This Sense of Purpose? 6. Leaders pay close attention to instructional effectiveness. Leaders constantly seek evidence that students are learning what their teachers are teaching. Regularly, leaders share this evidence in ways that build the capacity of teachers from day to day, creating a culture of professional growth.

  22. How Do Great Schools Build and Sustain This Sense of Purpose? 7. Leaders measure and communicate progress toward goals regularly. Goals become real as baseline measures and regular measurements of progress are collected, posted, discussed, disaggregated, acted upon, and celebrated promptly and regularly.Leaders make data accessible and actionable.

  23. Passion Schools that achieve dramatic differences in results show a passion for building and sustaining a climate in which every student, parent, and staff member knows that they are a valued, respected member of the school community. As well, they are passionate about improving teaching and learning continuously.

  24. How Do Great Schools Build and Sustain This Passion? • Leaders make everyone feel valued, respected, and appreciated. • Students, parents, teachers, and support staff know they are valued. Leaders collect information that helps them know how to improve relational issues. They identify and resolve issues promptly and professionally. They evidence great integrity and sincerity.

  25. How Do Great Schools Build and Sustain This Passion? 2. Leaders help educators support each other in learning how to teach students more effectively and efficiently. Leaders provide time and support in a manner that helps educators learn that one of their primary roles is to support the ongoing learning of their colleagues.

  26. How Do Great Schools Build and Sustain This Passion? 3. Leaders value improvement and growth. People feel like they can take risks and try to improve because they know their efforts will be appreciated and supported.

  27. How Do Great Schools Build and Sustain This Passion? 4. Leaders build and retain a positive, constructive climate. Leaders refuse to be passive when others choose to be negative. Respectfully, but clearly, administrators and teacher leaders speak out when others claim that goals are unattainable.

  28. How Do Great Schools Build and Sustain This Passion? 5. Improvement is rewarded. Lack of improvement is not. Lack of effort is not tolerated. Leaders communicate their passion to transform relationships, teaching, and learning through their actions. They reward improvement efforts and they make clear that a lack of effort is unacceptable.

  29. Persistence Schools that achieve dramatic differences in results persist as they encounter challenges, setbacks, and frustrations. As well, they persist in their improvement efforts even when they exceed the results achieved by other schools. They keep moving forward when others lose hope or become comfortable with their current levels of performance.

  30. How Do Great Schools Build and Sustain The Ability to Persist? • Leaders build hope. • Leaders give students, parents, teachers, and support staff reasons to believe that their efforts are worthwhile. College and careers are constant topics of focus. Policies are designed/implemented to nurture, sustain, and rekindle hope.

  31. How Do Great Schools Build and Sustain The Ability to Persist? 2. Leaders help everyone remember that learning should be fun. Leaders help educators teach in ways that students like to learn. They encourage teachers to teach in ways that build upon students interests, backgrounds, cultures, and prior knowledge. They help educators consider how they can make learning fun.

  32. How Do Great Schools Build and Sustain The Ability to Persist? 3. Leaders build leaders. Leaders create platforms for the leadership of many others who want to influence school improvement. Leaders distribute leadership opportunities in ways that build the capacity of individuals to contribute to the school’s success.

  33. How Do Great Schools Build and Sustain The Ability to Persist? 4. Leaders build systems and structures. Leaders design and implement systems that ensure that improvement efforts will succeed and be sustained. These systems and structures facilitate collaboration and help ensure that important tasks will be completed even when key individuals are not present.

  34. How Do Great Schools Build and Sustain The Ability to Persist? 5. Leaders celebrate progress frequently. Frequently, leaders celebrate improvements (both formally and informally). They find elements of success worth celebrating in results others see as failure. They are skillful at acknowledging everyone who contributed to successes.

  35. How Do Great Schools Build and Sustain The Ability to Persist? 6. Leaders help others see setbacks as learning opportunities. Leaders act as if every “failure” is a step along the journey to success, as long as people are willing to learn from their actions.

  36. How Do Great Schools Build and Sustain The Ability to Persist? 7. Leaders help others remember the real purpose. Leaders help other persist by providing constant reminders that the real purpose is not to improve scores, achieve benchmarks, avoid sanctions, or acquire recognition. The real purpose is to transform schooling in ways that improve students’ lives.

  37. In Summary Some leaders help their schools turn around and achieve great results because they generate: • Clear purpose • Unwavering passion & • Powerful persistence… In ways that lead to positive, substantive changes in teaching and learning!

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